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Lewis Hamilton desperately wants to add an eighth F1 world title to his collection, but at 39 time is running out for the Mercedes driver and Max Verstappen is dominating right now

Jenson Button is adamant Lewis Hamilton still has what it takes to finally secure that elusive eighth Formula 1 crown.

Lewis Hamilton is 39 and will wave goodbye to F1 in the coming years

The Brit thought he’d done it in 2021 but was controversially denied in Abu Dhabi, Max Verstappen taking the glory instead. And the two seasons since have been all about the Dutchman and his Red Bull team.

Mercedes, meanwhile, have been off the pace. They have struggled to provide Hamilton and team-mate George Russell with a car capable of competing with Verstappen and so the seven-time world champion has gone more than two full years without a single race win.

That is the hurdle he must get over first, to add to the 103 F1 victories he has already garnered in his remarkable F1 career. After that, Hamilton might still be able to dream of what would be a record-breaking eighth title.

Lewis Hamilton explains change of heart by staying in F1 past his 40th  birthday | Formula 1®

If Mercedes can up their game, then Button is adamant his old McLaren team-mate still has what it takes to do it. “When you’ve won for so many years and then suddenly that’s taken away from you, it can work in two different ways,” said the 2009 world champion.

“One, you are just like, ‘Well, there’s no point anymore, I want to retire, I’ve been at the peak for so long and now I’ve not won a race in two years’. But also it can make you more hungry to get back to that, and Lewis is in that position right now, I think.

“Lewis is as good as ever I would say in terms of his outright speed, but also now he seems much more comfortable in himself and confident in his ability, so he makes fewer mistakes. So he’s even better now than he was five or six years ago.

“That’s tough [for his rivals]. If he gets a car that’s competitive enough to fight for victories, when someone is that strong and that confident in themselves it’s difficult to beat, as you can see with Max Verstappen right now.”

How Lewis Hamilton should already be a 10-time World Champion |  RacingNews365

Former F1 racer Christijan Albers, on the other hand, has spotted signs of Hamilton losing patience with his current situation. “Hamilton looked quite frustrated at the end of the [2023] season. I can imagine that too,” he wrote in Dutch newspaper De Telegraaf.

“Sure, he’s had years where he beat everyone, but has now gone two full seasons without a win – that’s going to eat at you. He wants [to win] more and more, but struggles with the fact that the Mercedes is not going faster. Then, at the end of the year, you are exhausted and tired. He hasn’t had that boost that you need for a while.”

Mercedes driver isn’t ruling out a revival for the 2024 Formula 1 season

After two nightmare Formula 1 seasons, Sir Lewis Hamilton is confident that better things will come for Mercedes in 2024 and that they will be a step closer to the Red Bulls of Max Verstappen and Sergio Perez.

In an interview with GP Racing, the British driver sees it viable to recover and get closer to the level shown by the Austrian team, who are defending double constructors’ champions.

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“It’s not going to be that easy, but you have to try and take the good bits and, through trial and error, try and add other bits to improve,” Hamilton told GP Racing.

Why is Hamilton so confident about a recovery?
Given that, the seven-time Formula 1 champion is confident the Milton Keynes outfit will make a mistake in the development of the RB20 in a pursuit of perfection.

“You can imagine Red Bull are also nervous about making too big a change and it being the wrong one,” he added.

“So, we need to be week in and week out close, add better performance and make our targets higher than ever because we have a huge gap to reach. That makes it really tricky.”

The pressure on Mercedes
On the other hand, Lewis Hamilton is aware that there is no margin for error at the Brackley factory to best develop the W15.

“There is a huge amount of pressure,” he concluded.

“Ultimately, as boss, Toto Wolff has to start leaning more on people rather than going in reverse gear.

“How do you do that? Of course, it’s not easy, as people break at a certain point. So, the role he always does is to keep everyone motivated.”

It should be remembered that Lewis Hamilton is living a long drought of Formula 1 victories, the last one being at the 2021 Saudi Arabian Grand Prix; while last season, his best result were three second places in Australia, Spain and Mexico.

While George Russell wants to be ahead of Lewis Hamilton, he believes he matched “the greatest of all time” for pace in F1 2023 and so must take the positives from that.

George Russell and Lewis Hamilton

Russell has now spent two seasons as Mercedes team-mate to seven-time World Champion Hamilton, though the second campaign did not go nearly as well as the first.

Having scored Mercedes’ only win of 2022 in Brazil, Russell ended his first season with the Silver Arrows ahead of Hamilton in the standings, but that swung for F1 2023 to produce a comfortable defeat for Russell against his iconic team-mate.

George Russell matching Lewis Hamilton pace
Russell reflected on his F1 2023 campaign as one of the strangest of his career where the results just did not come together, only two podium finishes achieved across the season.

F1 News: Lewis Hamilton Ducks Out Of Latest 2023 Drivers Vote - F1  Briefings: Formula 1 News, Rumors, Standings and More

However, Russell places his outright pace on a par with Hamilton’s and while he does not want to settle for this, he admits he needs to be “realistic” and see the achievement in simply being a match for Hamilton, who has a record 103 grand prix wins to his name.

“I’ve been on Lewis’ level, on average, throughout this year,” said Russell in an interview with the Telegraph.

“And I’m not satisfied with just being on his level. I want to be ahead of him. But I’ve also got to be realistic.

“I’m going up against the greatest driver of all time. He’s definitely not a bad benchmark. And, you know, I think qualy statistics, if you include sprint races, we’re exactly the same. And pace-wise, we’re generally the same as well.

Lewis Hamilton accuses George Russell of 'dangerous' driving after Spanish  Grand Prix collision | The Independent

“So there are positives. And to be honest I’d prefer to be sat here without the results, but with the pace. Rather than saying ‘Oh, we lucked into a result here or we lucked into a result there’ when actually I was a tenth or two off the pace.”

George Russell is not feeling the pressure
Russell could potentially have added a second win to his F1 CV at the 2023 Singapore Grand Prix, but his ambitions were met with disaster while harrying leader Carlos Sainz for the victory as he crashed out in the closing stages.

Singapore was his “lowest point of the season”, though Russell denied the suggestion that he was suffering second-season syndrome and crumbling under the pressure in a underwhelming second Mercedes season alongside Hamilton.

F1 News: Lewis Hamilton "Working In The Background" On Major Project Ahead  Of Retirement - F1 Briefings: Formula 1 News, Rumors, Standings and More

“There have been a few small incidents,” he said. “Nothing major, but they happened.

“They haven’t happened in previous years. I need to try to understand why that is.

“It’s not pressure. I don’t care if I have the greatest driver of all time in the garage next to me, or if I’m a one-man team. It doesn’t change the way I approach my job. There’s definitely been no additional pressure.”

Both Hamilton and Russell signed new Mercedes contracts during the F1 2023 campaign, keeping them with the team until the end of 2025.

A representative of Lewis Hamilton contacted Red Bull about him partnering Max Verstappen at the world championship-winning team before he signed a £100million deal to remain at Mercedes, and he also held talks with Ferrari.

Lewis Hamilton (right) was open to becoming Max Verstappen's (left) team-mate before penning his bumper new £50m-a-year Mercedes deal, Mail Sport can sensationally now reveal
Lewis Hamilton (right) was open to becoming Max Verstappen’s (left) team-mate before penning his bumper new £50m-a-year Mercedes deal, Mail Sport can sensationally now reveal

The explosive claims come in an exclusive interview with Red Bull team principal Christian Horner, blowing a hole in Hamilton’s insistence that Mercedes was the only place where he wanted to see out his career.

The revelations reinforce Mail Sport’s story in May that Hamilton and Ferrari had dialogue about doing a deal – explicitly denied by the driver and the Scuderia’s team principal Fred Vasseur at the time, but proven correct now.

Horner said: ‘We have had several conversations over the years about Lewis joining.

‘They have reached out a few times. Most recently, earlier in the year, there was an inquiry about whether there would be any interest.

Hamilton also held talks with Ferrari about joining Horner gave an exclusive interview to Mail Sport

‘He met John Elkann (Ferrari chairman), too. I think there were serious talks.

‘It was around Monaco (in May). There were definitely conversations, perhaps with Vasseur, too. But certainly with Elkann.

‘But I can’t see Max and Lewis working out together. The dynamic wouldn’t be right. We are 100 per cent happy with what we have.’

After protracted negotiations, 38-year-old Hamilton signed up until the end of 2025.

The deal, which takes the seven-time champion close to his 41st birthday, was announced at the end of August.

Horner won’t divulge who contacted him. If Lewis himself is ruled out as the agitator, as he is, it comes down to two candidates: his New York-based manager Penni Thow and, as if from another age, his father Anthony.

Thow, who is founder and chief executive of Cooper, a company that specialises in entertainment, media, fashion, sports, technology and philanthropy (if you will!), is now Hamilton’s chief of staff. She is little known to the outside world or indeed to most of the travelling F1 caravan, though she attends most races.

For the last couple of years, she has been Lewis’s closest adviser and lieutenant, and points him nicely towards business interests beyond the track.

The seven-time world champion has endured a very challenging season with the Silver Arrows
The seven-time world champion has endured a very challenging season with the Silver Arrows

But if the conduit wasn’t Anthony, I’ll eat this newspaper. Fifteen years after being jilted by Lewis as his manager, he remains a major power behind the throne.

While we may never know who made the approach, Horner is at least adamant that Hamilton will never wear Red Bull overalls.

The 50-year-old team principal is consistent on this. Prior to Lewis being granted his big F1 break by Ron Dennis, Horner advised an itchy-for-instant-gratification Anthony not to let Lewis leave the McLaren stable, and to play the long game, when he inquired after a seat there.

Horner further told Lewis when he went to see him, publicly, at the Canadian Grand Prix during the first blossoming of Red Bull success more than a decade ago, that his services were not required. It is a shame for the sport that we will never see Verstappen-versus-Hamilton in the same machinery. It is the dream ticket.

Horner’s revelation illuminates the subterfuge in Formula One. You cannot accept a denial at face value, a point underlined by Hamilton and Vasseur denying any veracity in the story we carried about serious interest from Ferrari in securing Hamilton’s services.

It also leaves one aghast at the notion that Hamilton believes in Mercedes’ capability to overcome their current trough – one win in two seasons so far.

Seeing Hamilton race in the same machinery as Verstappen (pictured) is F1's dream ticket
The seven-time world champion has endured a very challenging season with the Silver Arrows

Anyway, Horner is committed to staying where he is at Red Bull and creating history, uninterested in running the sport, for example. Liberty Media, F1’s owners, will look outside the sport for their next chief executive when Stefano Domenicali leaves.

‘We obviously had an incredible period with Sebastian Vettel and then we went through the dark years when we had an uncompetitive engine,’ said Horner, a Netflix ‘villain’ in his obvious animosity towards Mercedes team principal Toto Wolff.

‘Shareholders were getting disenchanted with the sport and we managed to turn it around.

‘My passion is motor racing and Formula One and I have no burning desire to do anything else. I have a professional respect for Toto. We’re getting on great since he hasn’t been competitive.’

Lewis Hamilton is still chasing a record eighth world championship, much to the annoyance of fan Serena Williams.

Serena Williams is backing Lewis Hamilton to win a record eighth Formula One world championship because she believes that the British driver should already have nine. The retired tennis great’s comment came after Mercedes team principal Toto Wolff revealed that he was motivated by ‘personal anger’ in his efforts to land an elusive eighth title with F1 legend Hamilton.

Serena Williams Just Announced Her Second Pregnancy at the 2023 Met Gala |  Vogue

The 38-year-old star has not won a race for over two years after Red Bull emerged as the dominant force in the sport, with Max Verstappen winning three consecutive drivers’ championships after Hamilton had won four on the bounce.

Speaking to the PA, Wolff said: “We are living in a hamster wheel where time passes so quickly that it doesn’t feel like it has been two years. You can see how quickly the pecking order changes. But, we have to look forward, learn from the past, and push now to make Lewis win quickly again. I have a personal anger and drive to make him win the eighth title because he should have it.”

The Mercedes boss’ comments were shared on Instagram before they were picked up on by Williams. Commenting on Hamilton, the 22-time Grand Slam champion wrote: “He should have had 9 already. But…lemme be quiet.”

US-FASHION-CFDA-AWARDS
Serena Williams believes Lewis Hamilton should have nine world titles.

It is not exactly clear which seasons Williams was referring to where Hamilton could have snatched another two world championship titles but the greatest British driver of all time has been denied the title on the final day of the season on no fewer than three occasions.

By far the most controversial was at the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix in 2021 when Hamilton appeared to be on course for his fifth straight title before a late safety car incident allowed Verstappen to close the gap on his rival after race officials permitted the Dutchman to overtake backmarkers.

Verstappen had jumped into the pits just before the safety car lap to put on fresh tyres and with a significant grip advantage he was able to overtake Hamilton on the final lap to land his first world title with Red Bull.

 

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Lewis Hamilton has won a joint-record seven F1 world championships.

Respect appears to be mutual between Hamilton and Williams, with the Mercedes star taking to social media to pay tribute to the American after she retired from tennis in 2022.

On hearing her announcement, Hamilton wrote on Instagram: “Taking a moment before the race today to show my appreciation and gratitude to the greatest of all time,@serenawilliams. We will never see another Serena. She’s one of a kind. She came through like a wrecking ball and has been so spectacular to witness.

“I remember watching her and Venus at their first games with my dad on TV. Seeing such talented women dominating a field where no one looked like them gave me hope. They made me believe that superheroes are real, and they can look me and my family.”